3.11.12

"al-CIA-duh" in Afghanistan promoting the terrorist ideology of Wahabism and Salafism

[If the United States
or NATO were actually serious about fighting a war against terrorism,
then this proposed Wahhabi monstrosity would have zero chance of ever
being built.(therefore its just a cover and an excuse) Since Wahhabi/Salafism has been at the core of US foreign
policy for over thirty years, the Saudis are now apparently,
indispensable. This religious aberration, which, through British and
American patronage, successfully masquerades as "Islam" for the purposes
of furthering Imperial policies. The Wahhabi penetration of
Afghanistan and Central Asia has given us both "al-CIA-da" and the
Taliban (both varieties), not to mention Jundullah (MEK) and the Islamic
Movement of Uzbekistan (IMU), the Bosnian terrorists, and so many other
outright terrorist armies.

If there was a single genuine "Christian"
in the entire US Congress, he would sacrifice himself on the steps of
the Capitol, to prevent Saudi Arabia from interfering further in either
Afghanistan or Pakistan.]

Well Peter depends on your true objective. If you want to stay around the area, fighting "al-CIA-duh" for ever, but your real purpose is to harvest heroin in Afghanistan for the bankers, establish and conduct business related to oil and gas, use Afghanistan as a super base against Iran, Pakistan, Central Asia.......then YES you promote an extremist Mosque smack bang in the middle of Kabul which will be very prominent architecturally speaking.

The death of 3000 occupation troops then is merely incidental loss to this true objective. The death of 50,000 Afghan civilians is incidental. The problems of Third World neighboring countries from this Afghan fallout drama is incidental.

For these types the Vietnam War was a total success, fixing the narcotic lines from Myanmar and SE Asia generally via Thailand to the USA mega market. The death of 70--150,000 Americans in that 10 year war unofficially was incidental to this secret objective. The loss of 4 million Vietnamese civilians was incidental to this secret objective. The destabilization of Cambodia and the ascension of Pol Pot aided by the USA was incidental to this secret objective.

The new mosque in Kabul will be similar to the Faisal
mosque (above) in Islamabad that was also built by Saudi Arabia in
1980s. Photograph: Mian Khursheed/Reuters

Saudi Arabia is
funding a $100m mosque and Islamic education centre in Kabul that will
teach thousands of students a year and help bolster Saudi influence in Afghanistan as
the west withdraws.

Work on the sprawling 30-hectare (75-acre) hilltop complex is due to
be completed by early 2016, when Afghan security forces will likely be
trying to hold off the Taliban with little Nato support.

“This Islamic centre has several aims, one is to ensure good
relations between Afghanistan and Saudi Arabia,” said the acting Saudi
minister of hajj and Islamic affairs, Dr Dayi al-Haq Abed.

Afghanistan’s neighbours and allies have been jostling for power in
the country for years; spending millions of dollars on aid, education,
TV and radio channels.

Efforts to secure a stake in Afghanistan’s future are intensifying
with the 2014 Nato withdrawal deadline looming, and a presidential
election to chose the first new leader in more than a decade set for
April that year.

But Abed said the centre was a decade-old project conceived by Saudi
Arabia’s late King Fahd, not a hasty effort to bolster the Gulf state’s
role in Afghan affairs.

“It’s not a political centre, its an independent centre,” he told the
Guardian.

“This centre will never try to work against the interests of
Afghanistan or Saudi Arabia. It is firstly a place for prayer and
secondly for education.”

A university with a library, lecture halls, gym and dormitories for
5,000 students will sit on a hill overlooking Kabul, next to the tomb of
the last Afghan king, Mohammed Zahir Shah. The nearby mosque will hold
up to 15,000 worshippers, making it one of the largest in the country.

Saudi Arabia has been one of the key players in the turbulent decades
since the Soviet invasion at the end of 1979, influencing both religionand politics
in Afghanistan.

The Saudis were a major funder of mujahideen in Afghanistan, sending
millions of dollars to Pakistan-based groups to pay for weapons and
other supplies. When civil war broke out it helped sponsor a peace deal,
even bringing top Afghan commanders to Mecca to swear they would
respect the agreement – although it fell apart almost immediately.

After the rise of the Taliban, Saudi Arabia was one of only three
countries to recognise the hardline regime, but since its fall in 2001
it has remained a generous donor to the western-backed government of
Hamid Karzai. More recently it helped lay the groundwork for efforts to
negotiate an end to the war. Saudi diplomats have kept a lower profile
than others though.

The new centre will likely have a large pool of applicants. Religious
schools mostly funded by private individuals and Saudi institutions
have spread the kingdom’s strict Wahhabi branch of Islam inside
Afghanistan and Pakistan – and all Afghans hope to travel there on the
hajj pilgrimage at least once in their lifetime.

The Afghan government has donated the land, and basic engineering
work is already completed. A joint committee of Saudi diplomats and
Afghan officials from the ministry of Islamic affairs will oversee the
centre once it is up and running.

“Its a big achievement for the Afghanistan government and the
ministry of hajj and Islamic affairs,” Abed said, adding that he hoped
it would pave the way for more Afghan students to further their
education in Saudi Arabia.

About Me

I have been under state surveillance and covert harassment in the UK since 1985, by MI-5 and their gullible friends where ever they are found, and overt harassment with surveillance since march of 1996, when I submitted my final year law degree dissertation, 'The relationship between the state, the security services and the law'.